Album Reviews
As documented in a self-effacing group interview on the record ("I wasn't alone in the fact that I couldn't play too well," says Strummer), the Clash was initially inspired by the Sex Pistols but soon outdistanced them. The heartbeat of the band bassist Paul Simonon and drummer Topper Headon never succumbed to the speedy pseudo-energy of other punk bands. The Pistols were angry young men indeed, but they kept the motivations for their anger hidden behind a wall of safe-typin fashions; the Clash told you why in no uncertain terms.
As this collection clearly shows, the Clash's political concerns remained in the forefront even as the band's musical influences moved beyond the Pistols ("Clash City Rockers") to reggae ("White Man in Hammersmith Palais") and rap ("The Magnificent Seven"). And truly, as might be gleaned from a sampling of the titles on The Story of the Clash: Volume I ("White Man in Hammersmith Palais," "London's Burning," "Tommy Gun," "Complete Control," "White Riot" and "Spanish Bombs"), the Clash's brand of rock, while commercially accessible, was overtly revolutionary. Listening to songs such as those, one got the sense that England was about to erupt in civil war at any moment.
This double-album collection (with its promising sphinxlike subtitle and hysterical Brit-gonzo liner notes, by one "Albert Transom," a supposed Clash valet) is stronger than any single Clash album. The cumulative effect of listening to this fearless and spirited evidence of the Clash's vitality only makes the band's dissolution more regretful.
One wonders what inner tensions led to the group's breakup. The romanticism of Mick Jones ("Train in Vain," "Should I Stay or Should I Go" and "Stay Free") stands out in vivid contrast to the often indecipherable political ranting of Joe Strummer, but both sentiments sprang from the same well of disillusionment be it with government or lover.
We need this band now more than we did then.
(Posted: Jul 14, 1988)
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- The Magnificent Seven
- Rock The Casbah
- This Is Radio Clash
- Should I Stay Or Should I Go
- Straight To Hell
- Armagideon Time
- Clampdown
- Train In Vain
- The Guns Of Brixton
- I Fought The Law
- Somebody Got Murdered
- Lost In The Supermarket
- Bank Robber
- (White Man) In Hammersmith Palais
- London's Burning
- Janie Jones
- Tommy Gun
- Complete Control
- Capitol Radio
- White Riot
- Career Opportunities
- Clash City Rockers
- Safe European Home
- Stay Free
- London Calling
- Spanish Bombs
- English Civil War
- Police & Thieves
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Review 1 of 1
johsua writes:
Though not entirely in chronological order it provides the band's character and attitude towards music's wide array of style and it is a must-have for any punk out there, it broke down the punk dilemma that everything should be loud and chaotic and vise versa. Artistically diversified and never boring it is the alternative music that time, mixing, experimenting and embracing different genre (i.e. country, blues ska, reggae, dub etc.)and making it work proved that they really live up to their name, conflicting yet harmonious, colliding but barely touching and confronting but interesting enough that they leave you asking more.
Feb 4, 2008 08:13:17
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2008 All Media Guide, LLC.